Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1983


Don't Answer Me

Buy Don't Answer Me now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Don't Answer Me

| cover = Don't_Answer_Me_-_The_Alan_Parsons_Project.jpeg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = The Alan Parsons Project

| album = Ammonia Avenue

| B-side = "Don't Let It Show"
"You Don't Believe" (Europe)

| released = 1 March 1984 (UK)

| recorded = 1983

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = New wave

| length = 4:09

| label = Arista

| writer = Alan Parsons, Eric Woolfson

| producer = Alan Parsons

| prev_title = You Don't Believe

| prev_year = 1983

| next_title = Prime Time

| next_year = 1984

| misc =

}}

"'Don't Answer Me'" is a 1984 song by the Alan Parsons Project from the album 'Ammonia Avenue'. It reached number 15 on the 'Billboard' charts in the United States and was the final 'Billboard' Top 20 hit for the group. It also reached number 58 in the United Kingdom, the group's highest chart placing in their native country. The music video was rendered in comic book style, with art and animation by Michael Kaluta.

The song



Instead of the art rock and progressive rock sounds for which Alan Parsons was well-known, Parsons crafted "Don't Answer Me" in the style of Phil Spector and his Wall of Sound technique. Eric Woolfson, the co-writer, handled lead vocals on the single, with Mel Collins providing a saxophone solo with a "soothing yet destitute wail".

Music video



The music video was filmed at the Broadcast Arts animation studio, with Kaluta acting as lead designer and animator from a script by D.J. Webster. The video took 23 days to film, using a 40-man animation team, and combined traditional cel animation (in the rendering of the figures), stop-motion animation (for the majority of the movements), and even claymation. The final cost topped $50,000.

The video is presented as a story in the fictional comic book series, 'The Adventures of Nick and Sugar', set in 1930s Florida. The story starts at the Flamingo Bar, where Sugar is on a date with the thuggish "Muscles" Malone. Sugar was once Nick's girl, and Nick drinks heavily (emptying a bottle of Johnnie Walker Red) as he watches Malone manhandle Sugar. After finishing the bottle, Nick leaves the bar and drives to the Burgers'N'Shakes drive-in, passing a billboard with the 'Ammonia Avenue' album cover displayed. While admitting his heartbreak to Leslie, the carhop, a black sedan carrying Malone and Sugar pulls up next to Nick's convertible. When Sugar resists Malone's demand for a kiss, Malone moves to slap Sugar. An enraged Nick pulls Malone from his car and starts brawling with the much-larger thug. Malone appears to have beaten Nick, but Nick summons one last powerful uppercut and knocks Malone clear off the planet, sending him into the left eye of the Man in the Moon. Nick and Sugar embrace, deeply in love; as they embrace, the view quickly cuts to a still picture drawing of the band featuring Woolfson and Parsons at keyboards, dressed in 1930s cocktail lounge outfits, performing the song. Nick and Sugar drive away together, with Nick pausing to wipe Malone out of the Man in the Moon's eye with his handkerchief.

The video was nominated for Most Experimental Video at the first-ever 1984 MTV Video Music Awards, but lost to Herbie Hancock's "Rockit".

The video became well-known in Ireland (though the song did not chart) through weekly airings on the Sunday afternoon MT USA show hosted from New York by Vincent Hanley.

Live recordings



Parsons and his "Alan Parsons Live Project" band perform the song in concert, with live versions released on the albums 'Alan Parsons Live' with Gary Howard and Chris Thompson on vocals, 'Eye 2 Eye: Live In Madrid', and 'Alan Parsons Symphonic Project, Live in Colombia', the latter two with Parsons on lead vocals.

Chart performance



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Personnel



*Ian Bairnson: acoustic and electric guitars

*Colin Blunstone: vocals

*Mel Collins: saxophone

*Stuart Elliott: drums, percussion

*Alan Parsons: production, Fairlight programming, engineering

*David Paton: bass

*Chris Rainbow: vocals

*Eric Woolfson: executive producer, keyboards, lead vocals

*Lenny Zakatek: vocals

References



Category:1984 singles

Category:1980s ballads

Category:The Alan Parsons Project songs

Category:Song recordings with Wall of Sound arrangements

Category:Animated music videos

Category:Arista Records singles

Category:1983 songs

Category:Rock ballads

Category:Songs written by Eric Woolfson

Category:Songs written by Alan Parsons

Category:Song recordings produced by Alan Parsons

Buy Don't Answer Me now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1983



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1107076463.